A plot is known as a
foundation of a story which the characters and settings are built around. It is
used to describe the events that make up a story or the main part of the story.
The plot also focuses attention on the important characters and their roles in
the story. It creates a desire for the reader to go on reading by absorbing
them in the middle of the story, wanting to know what is happening next.
In the two stories Happy
Endings and A Worn Path, both Atwood and Welty create unique plots.
Neither of the authors focus on characterization in their stories, they allow
the reader to visualize the characters through the events that occur throughout
the story. In A Worn Path, Welty
describes the journey of an elderly black woman named Phoenix Jackson who walks
from her home to the city of Natchez to get medicine for her sick grandson. In
the beginning of Happy Endings, Atwood begins by introducing the two
main characters, John and Mary, and then offers six different scenarios of who
they are and what might happen to them. Both authors have created a plot that
the characters and settings are built around.
In the first
scenario of Happy Endings, Atwood refers to it as the "happy
ending." In this scenario, everything goes right, the characters have
wonderful lives, and nothing unexpected happens. She does not release much
information on the characters, they are entirely undeveloped. In A Worn
Path, Welty allows the reader to see Phoenix as a loving, caring and
determined woman who is facing many obstacles to get medicine for her sick
grandson. Welty never describes what her name symbolizes in the story. She has
left it up to the reader to portray phoenix as they wish.
In conclusion, the
plot reveals the entire story and gives the reader a sense of completion that
they have finished the story and reaches a conclusion. By identifying and
understanding the plot, the reader is able to understand the message conveyed
by the author and the moral of the story.
Works Cited
Atwood, Margaret. “Happy Endings.” Backpack
Literature: An Introduction to Fiction, Poetry, Drama, and Writing. Ed.
X.J. Kennedy and Dana Gioia. Pearson, 2012. 290-93. Print.
Welty,
Eudora. “A Worn Path” Backpack Literature: An Introduction to Fiction,
Poetry, Drama, and Writing. Ed. X.J. Kennedy and Dana Gioia. Pearson, 2012.
365-72. Print.
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